Contact Information: Contact: Tess Dumlao (602) 653-6585
Arizona Swimmers Attempt to Break World Record
Event Raises Awareness for Water Safety and Drowning Prevention
PHOENIX, AZ--(Marketwire - August 7, 2008) - More than 220 swimmers from across Arizona will
attempt to break the current Guinness World Record™ one-hour relay swim
on Sunday, August 10 starting at 7:30 a.m. at the Paradise Valley Pool,
17648 North 40th Street in Phoenix. The record is currently held by a team
of English swimmers with 204 participants.
The purpose of this history-making Kids Saving Kids Relay event is to raise
awareness, visibility and importance of water safety and drowning
prevention. Phoenix Councilman Claude Mattox, advocate of water safety and
drowning prevention, will kick off the relay race by being the first
swimmer. FAST, the Foundation for Aquatic Safety and Training, is
organizing the event and founder Joe Zemaitis is the acting swim coach for
the team attempting to break the Guinness World Record. The public is
welcome to come out to the one-hour relay event and cheer on the swimmers.
"August is Drowning Impact Awareness Month and many people don't know that
drowning is the leading cause of death for infants and young children in
Arizona, which is 100% preventable," said Joe Zemaitis, founder and
president of FAST. "In Maricopa County alone, nine children have drowned
this year; two of those fatalities occurred in the few past weeks."
FAST was formed after one of Coach Zemaitis' Phoenix swim students, Braxton
Bilbrey, made his famous 1.4-mile swim from Alcatraz Island to the San
Francisco shoreline in May 2006. He was seven years old at the time of the
record-breaking swim. Since then, FAST has assembled a team of young
swimmers as ambassadors who visit schools in the community to promote water
safety.
Dubbed as the FAST Talkers, these young leaders offer a child-friendly,
understandable and memorable presentation on water safety to pre-K through
2nd grade students. Another community outreach program FAST promotes is
their Water Safety for Refugees program, where FAST's team of young
swimmers gives hands-on guidance to local refugee children the basics in
water survival skills. This program is in partnership with the
International Rescue Committee (IRC).
Supporting FAST's "Kids Saving Kids" Relay are Denise Pitts, president and
co-founder of The HALO Foundation, Tiffaney Isaacson, water safety
coordinator for Phoenix Children's Hospital, Rich Bauer, director of
community programs for the United Phoenix Fire Fighters Association's
Adopt-a-Pool-Fence Program, and other drowning prevention organizations.
ABOUT FAST -- Foundation for Aquatic Safety and Training, a non-profit,
501(c) (3), enables competitive swimmers to teach swimming to small groups
of high-risk children and organize, promote and executive water safety
events in schools and pools in every community. www.TheFastFoundation.org